London — Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB) said on Tuesday it had opened a criminal case against exiled tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and other prominent Kremlin critics, accusing them of plotting to seize power.
The FSB said it was investigating all 22 members of the Russian Antiwar Committee, a group of politicians, business people, journalists, lawyers, artists and academics based outside the country, who oppose Russia’s war in Ukraine.
Apart from Khodorkovsky, the group includes prominent dissident Vladimir Kara-Murza, former world chess champion Garry Kasparov and former prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov. The FSB statement referred to the group as “Khodorkovsky and his accomplices”, implying it saw him as the main figure. It says they had formed a “terrorist organisation”.
The move came less than two weeks after the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, a human rights forum of legislators from 46 European countries, said it was creating a “platform for dialogue” with Russian democratic figures in exile, in which Khodorkovsky said he aimed to participate.
Moscow quit the Council of Europe in 2022 while facing expulsion over the invasion of Ukraine.
In an interview with Reuters, Khodorkovsky rejected the accusations — including that the Antiwar Committee had funded and recruited Ukrainian paramilitary units — as “absolutely false”. He said its activity was exclusively public, peaceful and humanitarian.
He said the Council of Europe initiative had touched a raw nerve with President Vladimir Putin because it was bringing together opponents of the Kremlin who, once his rule ends, could one day run the country.
“This alternative point of legitimacy represents the greatest danger for him and his regime,” said Khodorkovsky.
“What this shows us is that this very approach to building relationships between international institutions and the consolidated Russian opposition ... is precisely the right approach.”
Khodorkovsky served 10 years in Russian prison
The FSB announcement signals Moscow’s determination to maintain pressure against exiled opponents of Putin, portray them as a threat to the state and counter any Western move to confer legitimacy on them.
Khodorkovsky, an oil company boss who was once Russia’s richest man, served 10 years in a Siberian prison on fraud charges that he and many Western countries said were politically motivated, before being pardoned in 2013 and leaving Russia.
Since 2022 he has positioned himself as a leading figure among Russian exiles opposed to Putin. Shortly after the war’s outbreak, he was designated a “foreign agent” by Russia.
Khodorkovsky, who is now based in London, said the latest accusations were a “black mark” from the FSB.
“Without a doubt, such a decision increases the level of risk for those who decide for themselves that they are ready to be an alternative to Putin’s regime,” he said.
Reuters









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